I can view those but cannot browse/view any images from the Catanzaro, Civil Registration (State Archive), 1809-1865 nor from the Napoli, Civil Registration (State Archive), 1809-1865. Can you check to see if you can view any records from those record groups? Thanks.

Best,Biff

"To dance beneath the diamond sky with one hand waving free, silhouetted by the sea, circled by the circus sands"

edit: addedI followed the links to Known Issues with Historical Records CollectionsHere's the list of collections with known issuesI checked Catanzaro, there's no info on which 'Organizations' can view the images

I don't get it. Records are all over 100 years old, and I can't believe that the province of Catanzaro would have complained. It appears that images can be viewed only by members of the church or of other undefined supporting organizations or at a participating Family History Center.

In the words of Chester A. Riley, "What a revoltin' development this is!"

Biff

"To dance beneath the diamond sky with one hand waving free, silhouetted by the sea, circled by the circus sands"

After spending all day yesterday working in the Palermo Termini, Lercara Friddi records and part of this early morning, I can no longer access any of the records. Just the black screen and not available message. I tried other databases to see if I could work on some of them but with no luck.

Something is going on with Family Search and I am not sure what. You can't call them since no one is there to help. Leaving a voice mail is useless since they won't get back until sometime next week and an email has the same problem.

It would be nice if they would just take the site down and leave a maintenance message. It would save a lot of aggravation for anyone who wants to work with the collections. It is a nighmare and a mess. Let's see, I think they would call this "poor customer service".

I did open a "case" with FamilySearch, asking why the images are not available, and Today I received a call from them saying that it is a temporary situation. I have the impression that the guy who called me had no clue on what was happening and was just trying to give an answer. As Lilbees wrote, I would call this "poor customer service".

The dialects of modern Italian all have their roots in the spoken form of Latin (Vulgar Latin), in use throughout the Roman Empire. Vulgar Latin had, no doubt, its own local peculiarities before the fall of the Empire. The political instability that followed Roman rule kept Italy from re-uniting as ...

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